Booktique

Saturday, 10 October 2015

A
new twilight-y book from Stephenie Meyer, the author who changed the face of and opened the doors to young adult genre with her twilight series, is out.

This
is something that looked impossible. Steph had time and again said she doesn’t
want to visit the world she created anytime soon. But on the tenth anniversary
since the time the first twilight book came out, she decided to pull the cat
from the hat and announced a complete new [well, or maybe just modified]
version of twilight.

A
peek in the past...

Back
in 2008, the world went frenzy on social media and everywhere else when the
news of Meyer working on ‘Midnight Sun’ spread like wildfire. Midnight
Sun was supposed to be a full length twilight book narrated from the point
of view of Edward. Everybody wanted a piece of it.

But
we all know the fiasco. Twelve chapters from the unfinished book got leaked on
the internet and pissed Steph off so much that she decided to give up on the
book altogether.

So
now it wasn’t surprising that Steph maintained a hush-hush to such a far stretched
extent that not even insiders and prominent reviewers seemed to know about it.
No advance readers copies sent out, no elaborate title and cover reveal. Just
the final copies directly turning up on the book shelves worldwide.

For
the tenth anniversary...

All
those years later, Meyer’s publishers hoped she would give up on her grudge and
let Midnight Sun slip through her fingers for the grand anniversary. But
she was past it. Instead, she asked them if they would like to have something
else. Something a lot more fun.

So
when Meyer’s publishers insisted she write a new book in the series, give them some sort of a forward or finish the
unfinished book, she decided it was time to shun the haters who haven’t let her
live in peace.

Hatred
for Twilight...

The
most common hatred was targeted to Bella Swan who was ‘a damsel in distress,’
and ‘the worst heroine in the history of literature.’

People
also went on to show their contempt for Edward. ‘Wow, now a guy who is impossibly
beautiful and sparkles! A perfect female dream. Oh, wait...’

Meyer
argued, “Any one surrounded by super heroes is gonna be a 'human' in distress.”

Good
point. But what about her obsession with love? As if she has nothing else going
on in her life. Her life crashes down when her ‘guy’ leaves. Ridiculous!

“Twilight has always been a story about magic and frenzy and obsession of first love,’ she insisted. "So it would have made no difference if the humans were male and vampires were female." To prove her point, she put that theory to test in this new book.

Although
all her arguments made sense, they didn’t stop people from circulating GIFs and
creating hundreds of twilight parodies in the form of books, movies, short
films and anti-fanfic.

THE
NEW BOOK...

Frustrated
with all this, she decided to swap the genders to see if the story changed. Bella [the meek damsel in distress]was now a boy Beau. And the sparkling
guy with inhuman powers, Edward, was now Edythe, a girl. She also swapped
the genders of every other character in the book. [Except Charlie, Bella's dad,
and mom]

Minus
the minor changes that were inevitable when you narrate a story from the perspective
of a boy instead of a girl [For example, the narration, words and thoughts are "not nearly so flowery"], majority of the plot remained unchanged.

And for Steph, writing this new book was "not only fun, but very fast and easy."

So in a dual attempt of silencing the haters and giving her Twihard fans a gift on the tenth Twilight anniversary, Stephenie Meyer wrote Life and Death: Twilight Re-imagined. [The book released on 6th October, 2015]

Wednesday, 4 February 2015

Anna
is not sick, but she might as well be. By age thirteen, she has undergone
countless surgeries, transfusions, and shots so that her older sister, Kate,
can somehow fight the leukemia that has plagued her since childhood. The
product of preimplantation genetic diagnosis, Anna was conceived as a bone
marrow match for Kate -- a life and a role that she has never
challenged...until now.

Like
most teenagers, Anna is beginning to question who she truly is. But unlike most
teenagers, she has always been defined in terms of her sister -- and so Anna
makes a decision that for most would be unthinkable, a decision that will tear
her family apart and have perhaps fatal consequences for the sister she loves.

My
Thoughts:

Minus
all the sub plotlines that dragged the story on, it was a good read. A gripping
and different story. Some of the sentences and life theories author presents
are enlightening.

Characters
are shades of grey and not simply black and white. You end up taking sides but
don’t outright hate any character. Except probably the mother. Her favouritism
is obvious and no matter how many times she says she loves her daughters
equally, you can tell in the heart of heart she simply doesn’t.

Jesse
(Anna's brother) who is a lost cause doesn’t play any major role expect be a
constant reminder of how ignorant the parents are to their kids other than
Kate.

The
story jumps from different points of views. We see a total of 7 to 8
perspectives each with their complete back stories which gets overwhelming and
annoying in the beginning. Eventually you get used to it. There are also a
lot of characters I hoped the writer would do without. Like Seven or
Izzy.

But
most of all, I didn’t expect the story to end the way it did. I am not sure if
I like the ending. Or if I'm still fully convinced. But for now, I’ll just sit
in a corner and grieve over that epic loss that I found a tad bit disturbing.

Sunday, 30 November 2014

A
modern day story retelling of the famous classic, Pride and Prejudice, Epic
fail captures the tone and sentiments of a seventeen years old Elize. The story
is narrated in her tongue.

Frankly,
I read the book not knowing it was a retelling. I picked it up because the
title and cover captured my attention. Both gave the idea that the book would
be a light, contemporary, young adult-ish read.

When I
googled the author and the book to gauge on more details about the characters I
fell in love with, I discovered the truth. And then I traced back, stunned at
the obvious plot plucked out of Austin land and my lack of ability to recognise
the screaming resemblance.

Plot in short:

Elise
Benton, the rational, prejudiced and daddy’s favourite of all Benton sister was
a younger shadow of Elizabeth Bennet. Derek’s character was moulded to fit
modern day shy, standoffish Darcy. Charming but wicked Webster was twisted to
form an epitome of Wikham. A poor family of four sister and two parents, a Chase
(Mr. Bingley, who falls for the oldest, modest sister of all), a
pain-the-the-arse sister to mess up things and the prejudices based on classes
and who is who was captured well to fit the taste the younger audience.

Why you should read it:

The
plot is same, the characters have more or less exact same personalities, even
the names match. What stood out were the High School setting, tone and the modern
twist to almost all events that took place.

In a
way I was glad I plunged into the story without pre-knowing it was a retelling.
It just made the entire experience more authentic for me.

But even
if you’re not an Austinite, you should read this. It’s not exactly the kind of
book that will linger in your mind for days, but it sure will make you stay up
late till you finish it and make you want to root for main characters.

Friday, 28 November 2014

So I went to this amazing book sale (I know, yet
again) where they had about 85 percent discount on all books and I got some
pretty amazing deals and amazing books. So here’s a quick haul of that.

Ajaya by Anand Neelkantan

We all know Mahabharata has two sides, one good
and one bad. And Anand Neelkantan is known for supporting the bad side. Well,
not supporting them in literal sense, but telling the entire story from their
perspective.

He does the same in this one, narrating Mahabartha
from Duryodhana's view point (eldest of the 100 Kauravas). And the book looks meaty, thick and just waiting to be
ripped off of its plastic cover. I cannot wait!

Plus, I met the author at a literary fest and
absolutely loved his funny, down to earth, pulling-jokes-on-himself personality.

Leap day by Wendy Mass

It’s a story of a girl who celebrates her fourth
birthday at the start of the novel. But technically she is sixteen because she
was born on the leap day of the leap year, February the 29th.

One of my favourite booktubers recommended this
book and it intrigued me a lot. So when I saw it just lying there over a stack
of books I flipped out. This was the book I started reading the
minute I boarded train back home. And so far, it’s really good.

Night in Rodanthe by Nicholas Sparks

A woman moves to live in Rodanthe when her
heartless cheat of a husband abandons her for a younger woman. But life has
decided to be mean to her, particularly when it decides to hit her new home
with a storm.

It sounds like the book will be fun. Besides,
anything Nico writes is worth paying for.

Amongst a lot of Nicholas Sparks books lying there
I decided to buy this for a couple of reason: it was the only hardback NicoS
book. It was cheap. I didn’t own a copy of it. It looked extremely pretty. And
it was in a perfect condition.

Water for Elephant by Sara Gruen

This story follows a man and his life at a circus.
The book has been turned into a motion picture that was a blockbuster starring
Robert Pattinson (Cedric Diggory of HP and sparkly boyfriend from Twilight).

I had to get it since the book is not only
hyped but also looks very promising. And it’s a little different from what I
usually read in case of setting of the story.

Dream trilogy by Nora Roberts

I can blindly buy Nora Roberts books. She is one of
my ultimate favourite romance novelists and this was one of my best buys of all
times. A three books in one edition (Daring to dream, Holding the dream and
Finding the dream) this massive book is a trilogy. But you don’t have to follow
the order in which they’re written since all Nora books are more or less stand
alones.

And now The News. *Drumrolls* it was only for a 100
bucks.

I know. I stopped breathing for a second too.

A portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James
Joyce

I have wanted to read this book since the time it was a recommended read in my literature class. It’s one of the most acclaimed Kunstleroman or artist novel and James
Joyce’s first semi-autobiographical book. The copy I own is a 2010 edition, but
this book first came out in 1916. And coincidentally, it is also an optional read in my next Sem. So I had to get it. Interesting fact about the book is Joyce
burnt his work in frustration because publishers rejected his story. Later on,
it was retrieved and reworked.

Just as long as we’re together by Judy Blume

This book revolves around three or four childhood
best friends and there is a lot going on between them. There’s not much
revealed in the blurb and I’d rather it stays that way. It just makes the
experience all that authentic. And I can’t wait to get into it since it’s
written by my darling author Judy Blume.

Lord of the flies by William Golding

This is one those books that you need to buy for
college, no matter if you personally want to or not. I am not expecting a lot
from it since I have no clue what to expect. And if I just keep it that way, I
might actually end up loving it.

But there’re things I don’t like about the copy
that I own. The condition, the smell and the font size which is as tiny as it
could get. I don’t like books that have weird fonts or fonts so small that you
need magnifying glass between your eye and the page to actually read what’s
written.

Yellowed pages give this typical smell to the book
which some people tend to love, but I usually sneeze if I come in contact with
it. sadly, this book just gives me that. Sigh.

The sale was by Ashish book centre in Thane, near
station. Check their website here:

And also as a reviewer of Indireads, they let me download one ebook amongst their delicious collection for reviewing. I chose ‘The
Perfect Groom’ by Sumeetha Manikandan which is a story of a newly-wed Indian
girl who marries an NRI. It sounds promising.

All in all, I’m pleased with the haul and hopefully I’ll complete reading all that by the end of this year.

Monday, 9 June 2014

Poppy Wyatt has never felt luckier. She is about to marry
the ideal man, Magnus Tavish, but in one afternoon her 'happy ever after'
begins to fall apart. Not only has she lost her engagement ring but in
the panic that followed, she has now lost her phone. As she paces shakily round
the hotel foyer she spots an abandoned phone in a bin. Finders keepers!
Now she can leave a number for the hotel to contact her when they find
her ring.

Well, perfect except the phone's owner, businessman Sam Roxton doesn't
agree. He wants his phone back and doesn't appreciate Poppy reading all his messages and wading into his personal life.

Review:

The
story kicks off right into action on page one. The story is narrated in present
tense through Poppy’s eyes. Poppy’s ultimate decision lies hanging till the
last moment and she finally makes one while standing in front of her
to-be-husband in church on her wedding day.

Poppy
is goofy, honest and extremely funny. She was so easily likable and relatable
that it was hard not to smile each time she walked on page. More than the
characters, the situations are so over-the-top that they naturally churn out
laughable reactions.

I
admire not only all of Sophie Kinsella’s heroines but also all her male
protagonists. They are all real gentlemen, laid back and sincere but also not
without flaws. It’s very easy to relate to her characters. Sophie Kinsella
makes situations hilarious more than
the dialogues.

What I did not like:

Poppy
worried about things that could have been solved easily had she been a little brave.
Like confessing she lost the ring or that she isn’t a genius like her in-laws.

Poppy’s
lack of confidence and her inferiority complex. But these flaws made her seem
more real nonetheless.

The
footnotes. They were distracting.

Suitable for: Anyone who wants to
have a good laugh, enjoy a well-written story with gripping plot and doesn’t
mind staying up all night with puffy eyes just to see what happens next. Go
pick it up!

Bianca Piper is too smart to fall for the charms of a man-slut and school hottie Wesley Rush. In fact, she hates him. But things aren't so great at home. Desperate for distraction, she ends up kissing Wesley and throwing herself into enemies-with-benefit relationship with him.

Until it all goes horribly awry. It turns out Wesley isn't such a bad listener and his life is pretty screwed up too. Suddenly Bianca realizes with absolute horror that she's falling for the guy she thought she hated the most.

Review:

I
have a short interest span. I can’t keep reading a book beyond 50-60 pages if it
doesn’t pull me in by then, unless it’s for college assignment. So a book that
keeps me up for a whole night ought to shoot up in my favorites list. And this one did.

Bianca is like any other
insecure teenager who has her fears and preconceptions that she isn’t beautiful
enough. But she wasn’t always so insecure. It is when the only dashing, cocky
guy in college she hates calls her a duff that she starts to look at her body
in a new, gloomy light. She notices everything she doesn’t possess— great body,
long, skinny legs, pretty face.

Wesley Rush, I hated himin the beginning. A cocky guy who thought too highly of
himself and didn’t believe in chasing girls because— duh— girls chased him. But
Bianca’s presence subtly changed him in the most believable way and we got to
see his nicer, deeper, hidden side. The ‘changed Wesley Rush’ was a really irresistible guy.

Toby Tucker falls in the ‘good guy’
category who as sad and clichéd it sounds, ends up last. He’s gentlemanly, who
doesn’t snicker or looks to check when a friend makes a joke about his
girlfriend’s boobs and takes things slowly. He maintains limits while kissing,
he looks out for his girl, takes her to nice dates.

In
short, very unlike Wesley.

He
is in his own way very attractive. He might not have abs or the charm that
sweeps a girl off her feet or leaves her feeling dizzy, but he is just the
person who you want to spend your life with. He is loyal, affectionate and
extremely intellectual.

The
book was extremely well written. I almost longed at one point to have written
it. Character development is bang on! At the end of it I knew the side character
of Casey and Jess just as well as I knew Bianca or Wesley.

Lessons learnt: It’s more than just a romance story between two people who are opposites. It shows different angles of a teenager's life.

Words
and name calling hurts no matter how unintentionally you toss it around. And
the ones that are casually tossed hurt more than the ones meant to sting.

Every
teenager has insecurity, everybody has screwed up and in a way everyone is a
duff if compared to someone else. It's only a matter of time and maturity that
one learns to shrug these titles off and learn to forgive oneself for past slip
ups.

And
lastly, looks never define you.

Without
spelling out these lessons, the writer has rather easily weaved those into the
story.

Suitable
for: Parents and teenagers alike. For teenagers to have a laugh at their life
and learn from it and for parents to know their kids better.

PS: Watch
out for the movie. The rights have been sold to CBS films.

*Spoilers*
Places where I went frenzy (either laughed or cried or swooned):

I
officially fell in love with Wesley when he sent that note to Bianca after a
series of insults and flings. ‘Wesley Rush doesn’t chase girls, but I’m chasing
you.’ *sigh*

The
bouquet and letter Wesley sent her was a gesture well done.

When
Toby asked her about prom and she screwed up by saying she hated it and then he
said ‘too bad coz I was hoping to ask you for it.’ So funny.

When
Cassy made a joke about the ‘padded bras’ I almost fell out of seat laughing.

When
Bianca poured her heart out to Wesley and said that the word 'Duff' hurt her, I cried at that.

Sunday, 8 June 2014

The book goes by the name 'Pride, Prejudice and Jasmin Field' as well.

Jasmin Field, a witty columnist of a woman's mag, lands a coveted role of Elizabeth Bennett in one fund-raising adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. Better yet, the play's director, Harry Nobel is every bit obnoxious as she'd hoped. Which means a lot of material for her column. And a lot of fun at the rehearsals.

Review:

The blurb doesn't even begin to sum up this book. It's a lot deeper and tangled than it sounds up there. All for better.

The modern story retelling of Jane Austen’s
classic ends in the same fashion. Lizzy and Darcy of this book, who are highly opinionated
about each other, clear their differences and fall in love.

Like Darcy, Harry Noble seems like a man who
thinks too highly of himself. And like Lizzy Bennet, Jasmin Field is prejudiced
and hates him the minute she sets eyes on him. Their initial encounter isn’t
too pretty.

There is also a snotty sister, like Ms. Bingley,
trying to court our Darcy-slash-Harry.

But what distinguishes this book from the
classic is its use of language, the sarcasm, modern, comic tone, the
supplementary characters, their voices, their pasts and their stories as they
unfold.

Acting up showed a lot of different point of views but did not mix them up. The strongest and probably the most sarcastic voice was of Jasmin Field.

There are tons of sub plots wired into one
another. At the beginning it gets a little confusing and overwhelming with all
those names that are thrown at us when we’re introduced to the huge cast of the
play. But the writers eases our way into each one of their heads and by the end
of it, they all become as real as fictional characters go.

I like the fact that apparently the most
handsome director alive on planet is not without flaws. When we finally learn
about his fears, shortcomings (like poor driving and conversation skills), he
feels more real making the story believable and much more agreeable.

Random
thoughts:
It’s by far one of my favorite chic lit I have read in a long time. It held my
attention throughout. I tend to wander off after about 50 pages if the book
fails to grip me. I can’t finish a book if it doesn’t pique my interest. And I
read this one in single sitting.

Overall: Predictable at times,
it’s still unputdownable for its amazing writing style, hilarious scenes and
super fast pace. I love the fact that we get to see the doom of every single
character. Yes, Every Single. The book gave me joy and laughter more than my
money’s worth.